Tech companies’ newest cause celebre? Boycott Breitbart

Online ad sales aren’t something that
typically capture the imagination. But throw in corporate shaming with
some political wrangling, and the topic gets downright interesting.

After the election of President Donald Trump in November, a secretive organization called Sleeping Giants popped up on Facebook and Twitter. Its mission: “To stop racist websites by stopping their ad dollars.”

Sleeping Giants’ main target has been Breitbart News, which made headlines Wednesday after students at University of California at Berkeley protested an appearance by one of its columnists. The right-wing news and opinion site, formerly run by senior Trump aide Steve Bannon, has been criticized as a platform for conspiracy theories and racism. Bannon himself called Breitbart “the platform of the ‘alt-right,'” a loose, online movement of people promoting the notion of “white identity,” including white supremacists and those advocating for a separate white homeland.

Sleeping
Giants decided to get companies to block their ads from appearing on
the site. And in doing so it learned that because of the way online ads
are sold, few advertisers know where their ads appear.

So far about 820 companies have blocked their ads on Breitbart, according to Sleeping Giants. They include big consumer brands like Kellogg’s, BMW and Visa, as well as dozens of tech companies, including Autodesk, Lenovo, HP, Okta, Vimeo and T-Mobile’s parent company Deutsche Telekom. Ride-hailing company Uber, which has been called out by Sleeping Giants for its ads on the site, has now also decided to block Breitbart. Uber’s rival Lyft had earlier decided to bar the site.

“One of Lyft’s core values is to uplift and support one another in
all that we do,” said Lyft’s director of communications, Adrian Durbin.
“We strive to ensure that our advertisements appear only on sites that
share this value.”

Similarly, an HP spokesman said, “Our vision is
to create technology that makes life better for everyone, everywhere
and we have no intention of advertising on sites that don’t align with
our values as a company.”

A Lenovo spokesman touched on a different point: “Following a recent article regarding women in science, tech, education and math (STEM), Breitbart has been blocked from all current Lenovo media campaigns. By the way, at the same time, we also tweeted: ‘Our ads are now blocked on that site. Incidentally, we think women should study TONS of science and math.'”

That’s
not to say everyone has joined in the Breitbart boycott. Amazon and
AT&T ads continue to show on the website. Amazon didn’t return a
request for comment and AT&T declined to comment for this story.

Breitbart didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Once politically neutral, Silicon Valley executives have become outspoken on social issues. Two years ago, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff threatened to cancel all spending in Indiana after then-governor Mike Pence signed a bill that would have allowed businesses to discriminate against gay and transgender people. Apple CEO Tim Cook wrote a now-famous op-ed in the Washington Post against similar laws in other states. Earlier this week, the CEOs of Facebook, Google and Microsoft criticized President Trump’s executive order temporarily blocking immigration from seven Muslim-majority countries to the US.

Their stance is notable because the tech industry employs more than 6.7 million people and accounts for 7.1 percent of the country’s GDP, according to the Computing Technology Industry Association.

How it all began

Breitbart’s popularity has surged since Trump announced his presidential bid in June 2015. In October 2014, Breitbart attracted about 8 million monthly readers, according to ComScore. By October 2016, the site drew in 19.2 million monthly visitors. While that’s roughly 5 percent of the US internet market, Breitbart still doesn’t top the 50 most visited sites. For comparison, Google was No. 1 in October with 246 million monthly visitors, and Tribune Media was No. 50 with 60 million visitors.

Some
companies may not want to block their ads on Breitbart and lose the
potential to reach that audience. Others might not even know they’re
serving ads on Breitbart.

That’s when Sleeping Giants steps in.

Sleeping
Giants was born shortly after Trump’s win in November. Its organizers,
who’ve asked to remain anonymous, said in email interviews that they
hadn’t spent much time on Breitbart before the election and were curious
to see what kinds of companies were placing ads on the site.

The
first company they came across was SoFi, a self-described alternative
finance company that does things like help college graduates find better
rates on student loans. They took a screenshot of the ad, started up
the Sleeping Giants Twitter account and tweeted the screenshot to SoFi’s
CEO.

“Within 30 minutes, he got back to us and was surprised the
ads were on the site,” said Sleeping Giants. “This set off alarm bells
to us, as we assumed that advertisers knew where their ads were showing
up.”

It turns out most companies have no idea where their online ads appear. Most online ad placement services use “programmatic advertising,” which targets people instead of websites. That’s why when you’re online shopping for something like shoes, you may see an ad for those shoes across various sites you visit. With programmatic advertising, those shoes seemingly walk in your footsteps around the internet.

If a company doesn’t want its ads to show up on a certain website, it
has to actively block that domain, said Mark Irvine, senior data
scientist for online advertising software company WordStream.

“In the past, these programmatic companies have been able to block ads from appearing on pornography sites or next to violent content,” Sleeping Giants writes in its FAQ. “But what they all missed was the fact that ads could appear next to highly charged, inflammatory and often fake news.”

Sleeping
Giants claims SoFi decided to block its ads on Breitbart after getting
the heads-up. SoFi didn’t respond to a request for comment. Sleeping
Giants then alerted five more companies, which it says also decided to
block their ads from the site. Then it alerted 10 more.

But momentum for Sleeping Giants’ campaign really picked up in December, after cereal maker Kellogg’s said it was removing ads from Breitbart because the site doesn’t align “with our values as a company.”

Breitbart reacted by launching its #DumpKelloggs boycott and told the Los Angeles Times that Kellogg’s decision was equal to “economic censorship of mainstream conservative political discourse” and “as un-American as it gets.”

Around the same time, dozens of other companies, including Warby Parker and Allstate, began to block their ads from the news site.

“The
number of ads from major advertisers are way down,” Sleeping Giants
claims after perusing Breitbart’s advertisers, while acknowledging it
doesn’t have information on Breitbart’s ad sales. It says a review of
Breitbart.com shows that “most of the ads now are for more local and
boutique companies.”

Ads are still ads

The boycott may not hurt Breitbart’s bottom line. That’s because of the way online ad sales work.

Most online ads are sold through massive digital advertising platforms like Google’s AdWords. One of these platforms, AppNexus, said in late November that it had blocked Breitbart from using its ad-serving tools because the site violated its hate speech policy. Shortly after that announcement, two other ad platforms, TubeMogul and RocketFuel, did the same, according to Wired.

Others platforms, like AdWords, say they let their clients choose which sites to block.

Sleeping Giants said it has begun to appeal to advertising platforms as part of its long-term efforts.

Online advertising software company WordStream has taken a deeper look at the success of ads on Breitbart. It places ads for more than 3,000 companies. Of those clients, roughly 40 percent have requested to block Breitbart. Even so, WordStream’s Mark Irvine said the boycott probably wouldn’t affect Breitbart.

“At best, we’re talking about removing a small share of all the advertisers that could possibly serve Breitbart,” Irvine said.

To a certain extent, Breitbart gets paid as long as its ad spaces are
being filled. Still, ad dollars also depend on how often ads are
clicked. Having major advertisers pull out could affect revenue, but
Breitbart likely wouldn’t feel a squeeze until big ad platforms start
blocking the site wholesale, said Irvine.

“Once you get a large
player in the game, such as Google, Facebook or an ad provider such as
AdRoll, that’s when domains such as Breitbart could begin to feel
financial burden,” Irvine said. “With one advertiser, it’s one in
several million. Whereas if you were to pull several million at once,
then that penalty is passed on.”

AdRoll, like AppNexus, TubeMogul and RocketFuel, also doesn’t provide ads on Breitbart.

“While
we do let our customers determine which sites they’d like to block, we
would like to clarify that AdRoll does not serve ads on Breitbart News
because it violates our policies around offensive language and hate
speech,” a company spokeswoman said.

Criticism of Breitbart prompted a tweet on Wednesday by Trump, who questioned whether UC Berkeley, known for its advocacy of free speech, should lose federal funds for protesting “people with a different point of view.” Students had demonstrated against an appearance by Breitbart editor Milos Yiannopoulos, a self-proclaimed internet troll who was banned from Twitter last June after leading a harassment campaign against “Ghostbusters” actress Leslie Jones.

For now, advertisers like Visa and Lululemon continue to block their ads from Breitbart one by one.

“Visa
works with its media buying agency to constantly optimize the ideal mix
of sites where our digital ads may appear,” a Visa spokesman said.
“Part of this process includes regular safeguards to avoid our ads
appearing on sites with sensitive, risque or controversial content.”